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August 26th, 2009 by Speed Budapest (Matt)

Is Woofer barking mad? Or a great ePR stunt?

Following on from the success of Twitter, the micro-blogging site which lets users publish 140 character updates, a new social network has launched that allows users to post messages that are at least 1,400 characters long. The novelty macro-blogging site Woofer, now has more than 4,600 users, many of whom have already posted several wordy ‘woofs’.

While social networks, such as Facebook and Twitter, have changed the way that PROs can communicate and collaborate with colleagues, clients, journalists and industry peers, Woofer is really taking the biscuit!

Although the macro-blogging site with its 1,400 character woofs is clearly a joke, it has attracted a lot of media attention and is currently one of the most shared web pages on social bookmarking site Digg. But rather than just being a novelty site setup to point fun at Twitter, it looks like the developers have cleverly created Woofer as a digital PR stunt to drive traffic to their website ShuffleTime.

A PR stunt can be defined as the creation of a strange or sensational story that has the sole purpose of generating media and public interest in order to raise awareness of a product or business that is associated with it. That is exactly what Woofer does, but online. By developing a humorous site that ridicules one of this year’s most talked about topics they have created something that many people will be interested in and will choose to share with others online. This personal recommendation is key to helping the site to go viral and attracting yet more attention and traffic to the site.

It will be interesting to see if any more companies opt to create digital PR stunts now that the silly season is in full flow.

April 6th, 2009 by Speed Budapest (Matt)

Are we about to see the birth of Jaiktwoogle?

Jaiktwoogle?

Reports that Google might be interested in purchasing Twitter for more than $250m might not be surprising but the effects of the acquisition could be.

The fallout from such a deal could range from Google employing the site’s real-time search technology to make its search engine index new web pages faster, to creating a Frankenstein style micro-blogging site, by merging Jaiku and Twitter to potentially form a social networking monster… Jaiktwoogle!

Google acquired Jaiku in 2007 and has been criticised ever since for failing to popularise the micro-blogging site. Following the acquisition, the search giant promptly placed the site back into beta mode, stopped new users from signing up to the site and watched, presumably open-mouthed, as millions of users chose to sign up to Twitter instead. Opting to do something similar with Twitter could prove to be disastrous, and would certainly put a dent in the site’s impressive growth of 3000% in the last year.

Plundering Twitter’s real-time search capabilities looks like a much more likely outcome, as Google could use the search technology to bring real-time search to the rest of the web. This would make it possible for users to find web pages as soon as they have been published. This could seriously help companies, as marketers could react to news and events much faster by publishing content on blogs and websites, which would then be indexed by Google almost instantly. A news-jacker’s dream!